Cities/Shanghai/Ramen/Kushi Ramen 纪州豚骨酱油拉面
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Kushi Ramen 纪州豚骨酱油拉面

JapaneseRamenTonkotsuYakitoriKishu

Kushi Ramen (纪州) is an unassuming yakitori and ramen den in Gubei's basement dining strip, serving what multiple guides call one of Shanghai's finest tonkotsu broths: soul-warmingly creamy pork bone, silky noodles, and properly rendered chashu from ¥47.

Price
¥
Area
Changning / Gubei
Kushi Ramen 纪州豚骨酱油拉面 — authentic japanese restaurant in Shanghai, Changning / Gubei
Plate № 56
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About
Named after 纪州 (Kishu), the historic Japanese province encompassing modern-day Wakayama and Mie Prefectures, Kushi Ramen operates as both a ramen counter and a yakitori den in the basement dining corridor off Jinyan Road in Gubei. The tonkotsu broth (¥53) is the flagship — a soul-warmingly creamy pork bone soup with deep umami overtones, topped with chashu pork belly whose fat renders beautifully into the meat on one side while carrying a pleasant scorch on the other. The Scallion Tonkotsu (¥47) — the same broth loaded with fresh scallions — is popular but the classic build is considered the more refined order. A six-minute ramen egg is the obligatory add-on, and the yakitori section makes Kushi equally suited to drinks-and-skewers evenings. City News Service and Sophie Steiner both placed it among Shanghai's top ten ramen destinations.
Why it's on Washoku Guide
  • Ranked among Shanghai's top ten ramen by both City News Service and Sophie Steiner's Gubei guide — independent corroboration of consistent quality.
  • The tonkotsu broth achieves a rare combination of soul-warming creaminess and clean finish, without the cloying heaviness of inferior pork bone preparations.
  • The dual ramen/yakitori format means you can extend a quick ramen lunch into a full yakitori izakaya evening without changing venues.
  • Prices starting from ¥47 for a full tonkotsu bowl make this one of the best-value authentic Japanese ramen experiences in the city.

Order the classic Tonkotsu (¥53) rather than the Scallion version — the scallions overpower the broth. Add the six-minute ramen egg without fail. — Format: Ramen counter and yakitori den. Authenticity: Named after 纪州 (Kishu, the historic Japanese province of Wakayama/Mie Prefecture); tonkotsu pork bone broth ramen; dual function as yakitori den; praised by both City News Service and Sophie Steiner as one of Shanghai's standout authentic tonkotsu ramen.

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